94 ENUMERATION OF PHILIPPINE PLANTS 



1922 



74. ARUNDINARIA Michaux 



ARUNDINARIA Nl ITAKAYAM ENSIS Hayata in Bot. Mag. Tokyo 21 

 (1907) 49, Journ. ColL Sci. Tokyo 25" (1908) 240; Gamble in 

 Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1910) Bot. 267; Merr. op. cit. 332. 

 Sasa niitakayamensis Camus var. microcarpa Camus Bamb. (1913) 



24. 

 Bambusa aff. B. pygmaea Miq. ; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) 

 Bot. 261. 

 Luzon (Benguet), Mindoro, Elmer H279, Merrill U73S, 61^89, 6222, Phil. 

 PI 177, B. S. 8379, 8893 McGregor, 58Jf6 Ramos, F. B. 10823 Curran. In 

 mossy thickets, sphagnum swamps, and open grasslands, altitude 2,200 to 

 2,700 m. Formosa. 



Local name: Utod (Ig.). 



75. BAMBUSA Schreber 



BAMBUSA CORNUTA Munro in Trans. Linn. Soc. 26 (1868) 113; Gamble 

 in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1910) Bot. 269; 8 (1913) Bot. 204. 



Luzon (Benguet, Nueva Vizcaya), Merrill 12If, 7711. In ravines along 

 small streams, altitude 1,000 to 1,600 m. Java. 



Local name: Lopa (Isn.). 



BAMBUSA MERRILLII Gamble in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1910) Bot. 269; 

 Camus Bamb. (1913) 128. 

 Luzon (Nueva Vizcaya), Merrill 229. In forests, altitude about 600 m. 

 Endemic. 



BAMBUSA MULTIPLEX (Lour.) Raeusch. Nomencl. ed. 3 (1797) 108; 

 Schultes f. Syst. 7 (1830) 1350; Steud. Syn. PL Glum. 1 (1854) 

 330; Munro in Trans. Linn. Soc. 26 (1868) 119. 

 Arundo multiplex Lour. Fl. Cochinch. (1790) 58, ed. Willd. (1793) 



119. 

 Ludolphia glaucescens Willd. in Ges. Naturf. Fr. Berl. Mag. 2 



(1808) 320. 

 Bambusa nana Roxb. Hort. Beng. (1814) 25, nomen nudum, Fl. Ind. 

 ed. 2, 2 (1832) 199; F.-Vill. Novis. App. (1882) 323; Gamble in 

 Ann. Bot. Card. Calc. 7 (1896) 40, t. 38, Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 

 (1910) Bot. 268; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 389; 

 Camus Bamb. (1913) 121. 

 Arundinaria glaucescens Beauv. Agrost. (1812) 144, 152. 

 Bambusa glaucescens Sieb. ex Munro in Trans. Linn. Soc. 26 (1868) 

 89, in syn.; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 7 (1912) Bot. 230, Fl. 

 Manila (1912) 105. 

 Planted here and there for ornamental purposes, sometimes for hedges. 

 Probably a native of China, now widely distributed in cultivation. 



Local names: Cana de china (Sp.) ; kauayan-china (Bik., Tag.) ; kauayan- 

 sina (Bik., Tag.). 



BAMBUSA SRI NCSA Roxb. Hort. Beng. (1814) 25 [non Fl. Ind. ed. 2, 2 

 (1832) 305] ; Merr. Interp. Herb. Amb. (1917) 97, Sp. Blancoanae 

 (1918) 75. 



Bambusa spinosa Blume ex Nees in Flora 8 (1825) 580. 



Bambusa blumeana Schultes f. Syst. 7' (1830) 1343; F.-Vill. Novis. 



